Washington :- When Hope Hicks is entrenched in the Oval Office battling the communications crisis of the day, Mercedes Schlapp steps up to the plate.
And she's been stepping up a lot, lately.
Just
as the first six weeks of the year have brought a breakneck pace of
controversy -- from the allegations leveled in the salacious "Fire and
Fury" book to President Donald Trump's comments about "shithole"
countries, two government shutdowns and reports that Trump once sought
to fire the special counsel -- Schlapp has found herself pinch hitting
more often for the White House communications director.
The senior adviser for strategic
communications has maintained a low profile since joining the White
House in September but is quietly gaining influence by providing a
steadying and experienced hand inside a frenetic White House. Schlapp
has increasingly stepped in to lead the communications staff when crisis
engulfs the West Wing and Trump demands Hicks be by his side, or at
least within earshot, often acting as a de facto communications director
in Hicks' absence, three White House officials said.
"Mercedes
has been a godsend ... Every time there is a void because there is some
craziness going on, Mercy's always there to be the leader of the team,"
one White House official said. "Otherwise, we'd all be chickens with
our heads cut off, just running around rudderless."
Beyond long-term planning, three White
House officials said Schlapp has increasingly helmed day-to-day tasks in
the communications department and become a go-to for officials outside
the communications department looking for messaging guidance. She has
also become a more visible presence outside the White House, appearing
on television more frequently -- including on Spanish-language networks
because she is of Cuban decent -- than in her first months at the White
House.
Communications staffers have
complained that in moments of crisis, they have gone days on end
without receiving any guidance on their tasks from Hicks, two White
House officials said. Hicks has also been increasingly absent from the
daily morning communications meeting, leaving Schlapp to lead the
sessions.
"The issue here is that
(Hope) will assert herself as the communications director but then when
the White House goes into crisis mode ... she retreats -- she just pulls
back from the team," a second White House official said.
Hicks
has also had to spend time communicating with her lawyer as the special
counsel's investigation has homed in on her role beside the President
in crafting the misleading response to news of the Trump Tower meeting
between the President's eldest son and a Russian lawyer. It's left her
distracted from her White House tasks for hours on end, two White House
officials said.
Hicks and Schlapp declined to be
interviewed for this story, but a White House spokesman insisted their
roles "haven't changed" and said Schlapp's ability to step in when Hicks
is otherwise preoccupied "is further evidence of how we collaborate and
work well with each other."
Stephen
Miller, the senior policy adviser and chief speechwriter, emphasized
that point in a statement provided by the White House.
"Mercedes
has the exact same role she had when she first joined -- she oversees
long term strategic communications and planning. The structure has not
changed," Miller said. "She, Hope and Sarah work closely together as an
incredibly effective and coordinated team. They are immensely talented,
universally respected and work tirelessly to advance and promote the
President's agenda."
But a source
familiar with Hicks' thinking did not push back on the notion that
Schlapp has stepped in to lead the team when Hicks finds herself dealing
with rapid response.
"When Hope's attention is with the President, Mercy is helpful (in) managing the team," the source said.
Schlapp most recently stepped in on
Friday, as the West Wing entered its third day of tumult stemming from
the allegations of domestic abuse against a senior aide, Rob Porter, his
resignation and the chief of staff's handling of the matter.
Huddling
with members of the communications team on Friday, Schlapp advised the
staffers to come to her with their questions and their needs of the day
while Hicks -- who was romantically linked to Porter -- was embroiled in
the controversy, three White House officials said. This time, Schlapp
found herself managing the communications team and lending a hand to the
crisis communications effort.
A
White House spokesman insisted Hicks continues to lead the
communications team and noted that Hicks led the morning communications
meeting on Friday to discuss the rollout of the White House's
infrastructure and budget proposals, even as the Porter controversy
stewed.
Several White House
officials chalked up the conflicting perceptions of Schlapp's role to
the unorthodox setup of the communications department and ambiguity over
both Schlapp's and Hicks' role. Some said Schlapp has simply grown into
a role that was always prescribed for her.
Hicks,
at just 28, found herself thrust into the communications director role
by virtue of her relationship with the President and only after the
stunning flame-out of Anthony Scaramucci, who served in the post for 11
days. She has not sought to fit the mold of a traditional White House
communications director, channeling Trump's views into White House
messaging rather than seeking to craft a communications strategy of her
own.
Schlapp, meanwhile, is a seasoned
Republican communications strategist and one of the few West Wing
officials to have previously worked in the White House, having served in
the communications department of President George W. Bush. She is often
viewed as the "adult in the room," one White House official said, and
her experience has been welcomed in a White House where strategic
communications planning has often taken a backseat to the whims of a
President who relishes controversy and often stokes it.
Her
experience is rooted not just in her time on the Bush campaign and in
the White House, but in her time at the helm of a Republican government
and public affairs firm, Cove Strategies, which she co-founded with her
husband, former Bush White House political director Matt Schlapp. She
also worked as a commentator at Fox News.
Ultimately,
it's Trump's view of himself as the White House's chief communications
strategist that has forced the White House press and communications
departments into an unconventional structure.
"Typically,
the press secretary is most on the front lines of crises. Not just
answering them in the briefings, but also leading the charge with the
team on how to respond," said Jen Psaki, the last White House
communications director under President Barack Obama.
While
the communications director should be a "partner" in crisis
communication, Psaki noted that the White House communications director
is traditionally to "see around the corner."
But
when crisis strikes in the Trump White House -- as it often does --
Trump demands that Hicks, his communications director and
longest-serving aide, be in the room.
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